Chau Tran Portfolio 2015-2017

Page 1

Chau Tran

Portfolio



Content

1/ Armature Urbanismo —Schindler Competition

2/ System Infrastructure Blur

3/ Masonry Design Competition —Undisciplined CMU Book

4/ Social Activator

5/ Ambiguity Undefined

6/ Ambiguity Undefined

7/ Oblique Open-endedness

8/ Temporary City Nomadic Dwelling

9/ Elements At the Met


Armature Urbanismo The Schindler Global Award | Competition 2016/2017 Year 4, Fall 2016 / Master of Infrastructure Planning Studio Critic / Jesse LeCavalier Contribution: board layout coordinator, designer

The departure of the CEAGESP market is treated as an opportunity to critically examine its assets and their impact, influence, and relationship with the site. The revitalization of the site begins by identifying existing resources, distinctive activities and convergences of energy. A framework of linked strategies induces growth and development during and after the market’s transition, and envisions a more dynamic site capable of openly involving its users as active participants in the production of the city. Operating through established socio-political mechanisms and at the infrastructural, architectural, and tactical scale, Armature Urbanism generates an interdependent system of physical, social, and cultural resources. An incrementally evolving infrastructural element, referred to as the Armature, becomes the driver of this new form of urbanism. The Armature is introduced as a conceptual tool, emerging through the connection of vacant lots and decaying properties selected for redevelopment and renovation to stitch together the remaining communities, activities, and assets on the site. At the infrastructural scale, the Armature provides utilities and services throughout the site, ensuring access to all emerging forms of urbanity. At the architectural scale, the Armature incentivizes growth and development of new hybrid programs while strengthening existing activities, and at the tactical scale operates as a framework for development of non-permanent human scaled interventions. The physical outcome of an Armature-based Urbanism is one with ramifications of resiliency for the site, fostering opportunity for growth, involvement, innovation, and cultural exchange through a hybridity of networks and spaces that enables flexibility and adaptability for the unpredictable nature of the city.


POTENTIAL MANIFESTATION OF STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK


STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK TO GENERATE AN ARMATURE URBANISM INTENSIFY EXISTING RESOURCES Evaluate and prioritize existing resources on the site, strengthen current activity. Designate vacant lots for development.

Promote mixed-use and hybrid typologies to generate resilient urban activity. Facilitate new modes of work, live, and play through diverse, interdependent exchange and interaction.

CATALYZE ARMATURE GROWTH

EXPAND MULTIMODAL MOBILITY

Foster connections between renovated and repurposed structures; incorporate developing areas into evolving infrastructural network.

Connect to existing transit networks, enable newly emerging forms of mobility and establish efficient transportation hubs linked to the armature.

CULTIVATE ADAPTIBILITY

DIFFUSE SITE EDGES

Anticipate varying density scenarios and encourage flexible programming.

Local Worker (1/2 mile radius) Outer Worker

SPONSOR HYBRIDITY

Increase accessibility from Vila Leopoldina by activating street edge program.


MULTIMODAL MOBILITY

Increase site access through integration of existing transit networks and support of evolving modes of transportation. CONNECT TO ADJACENCIES Integrate into the surrounding neighbourhoods to facilitate future growth and root the Armature into the urban fabric.

EXTEND STREET GRID Expand on existing street structure to increase site accessibility.

EXPAND BICYCLE AND PEDESTRIAN NETWORKS Promote environmentally friendly modes of transportation to reduce vehicular use.

IMPLEMENT CAR SHARING Alleviate traffic by creating opportunities to reduce vehicular use.

MERGE EXISTING AND NEW TRANSIT NETWORKS

OPTIMIZE TRANSIT SWITCH EFFICIENCY

Connect developing modes of transportation, such as an electric shuttle service, to existing city transit systems.

Link interchange points for rapid connection to alternate systems.


INCREMENTAL DEVELOPMENT TO SUPPORT OPPORTUNISTIC GROWTH RECLAIM UNDERUTILIZED LOTS

DEMOLISH UNDERUSED FACILITIES

Redevelopment of the site begins with acquisition of existing vacant lots, which become drivers of all successive site strategies. This initial step targets inactive spaces and proposes new functions and program in order for this fragment of the city to attain greater potential through reintegration of an Armature-based urban fabric. Phases are used to indicate the sequence of development not driven by a strict timelime or fixed-end product.

Vacant areas throughout the site are reclaimed and developed; simultaneous demolition of underused and deteriorating facilities clears the way for future Armature growth and new hybrid typologies, which will serve a multitude of site users.

Demolished Program Existing Program

Existing Program

Vacant Lots

Vacant Lots

ESTABLISH ARMATURE NODES

AMPLIFY NETWORK

With vacancies repurposed, older structures demolished or renovated, and Absorbers constructed, the Armatures begin to emerge. These bundled systems of infrastructure will provide connectivity between site components and resources, and support a hybrid urbanism. During the early stages of construction, two nodes of the Armature develop at the north and south ends of the site, linking to the Absorbers.

The next phase extends the Armatures toward the core of the site, stitching together renovated structures along the Armature’s route. Buildings are “reskinned” or combined, fusing them with site infrastructure and creating a series of interconnected public spaces throughout the network.

Armature

Armature

Emerging Armature

Emerging Armature

New Construction

New Construction

Renovated Program

Renovated Program

Demolished Program

Demolished Program

Existing Program

Existing Program

Vacant Lots

Vacant Lots


RENOVATE EXISTING RESOURCES

ABSORB AND CREATE URBAN ACTIVITY

Certain structures embedded with local knowledge and tradition are integral to the fundamental steps of site redevelopment and are targeted for upgrades. The concrete plant at the south end of the site is a key resource and will be tapped to contribute its materials to the large scale development of upcoming phases.

The intitial phase continues with the deployment of Urban Absorbers, new facilities that will function initially as large parking structures for expected increase in use. The absorbers are designed to flexibly accommodate changes in site use and to adapt gradually to the anticipated decline of vehicles, shifting from car sheds to multifunctional public spaces.

New Construction Renovated Program

Renovated Program

Demolished Program

Demolished Program

Existing Program

Existing Program

Vacant Lots

Vacant Lots

ACTIVATE GROWTH

DEPLOY MULTI-SCALE ELEMENTS

The Armature network progresses with the extension of the MLP building over the river, allowing residents of nearby Jaguare more convenient access to the site’s expanding resources, while residents within the site’s favelas are relocated to newly built housing in a participatory process. The Armature along the river, coupled with new purification basins within the existing waterway, becomes a crucial element in the preservation and restoration of the riparian landscape.

The final phase of redevelopment introduces large scale hybrid facilities including new housing, schools, civic center extensions, and mixed-use commercial spaces, as well as tactical scale interventions and infr astructural support. The construction and completion of these elements is facilitated by the Armature’s established physical and social infrastructure. Upon culmination of this phase, full site mobility and utilization is expected.

Armature

Armature

Emerging Armature

Emerging Armature

New Construction

New Construction

Renovated Program

Renovated Program

Demolished Program

Demolished Program

Existing Program

Existing Program

Vacant Lots

Vacant Lots


DIFFUSE SITE EDGES Modifications to the porosity of the existing boundaries expand access to the site’s interior and integrate it with its surroundings.

CONNECT ACROSS RIVER Formerly a dead zone, the river’s edge becomes activated as the MLP Armature extends across its body to the dense neighbourhoods of Jaguare. A new crossing coming in the form of an elevated framework encourages movement to and from the site by bridging over the existing bands of transportation infrastructure on either side of the water. The basin facilities within the river treat the highly polluted water as well as attract visitors and boost awareness of the systems that allow the site to function efficiently. This hybridized edge condition creates social connections and environmentally driven mechanisms.

STITCH NEW AND EXISTING The strategy utilized along Av. Dr. Gastão Vidigal at the northeast edge of the site disintegrates the pre-existing barriers which denied Vila Leopoldina residents free circulation in and out of the CEAGESP Market. By extending the existing grid from the old neighbourhood to integrate the site with its context, programmatic interventions are designed to be more edge friendly and provide a high level of site porosity. Many new structures along Av. Dr. Gastão Vidigal have been raised in order to create gateways past the perimeter and usher visitors into public spaces.

REVITALIZE CONNECTIONS The shorter edges of the site, along the north and south sides, welcome outlying transit systems and recreation spaces into the area as well as set the stage for potential Armature extensions to other spaces of the city and beyond. At the north end, the existing train station links up with the new shuttle system, extending the reach of public transportation to the core of the site. The south end repeats the patterns of the Parque Estadual Cândido Portinari with the Armature acting as an ecological pathway branching toward the river. The outward crawl of Armature Urbanism extending to the greater São Paulo region begins at the site boundary.


CULTIVATE ADAPTABILITY Anticipate varying density scenarios that encourage flexible programming.

Diagram Legend Armature Urban Contributor (Visitor)

STABILITY

FROM INSIDE OUT

The Urban Armature provides varying types of public space for users and acts as a conduit for site transit. Visitors, or urban contributors, utilize the three levels of Armature and foster growth of the local economy through their interactions with program. Clustered living spaces spread throughout the site make it possible for inhabitants to interact with visitors on a regular basis. Population density is high with multiple areas of intensity in and around the Armature with live, work, and play all blending together within a hybridized urban enivronment.

Local businesses build strength and housing expands. The Armature, once filled with open space and site transit, is filled with active shops and offices as resident living quarters take up the surrounding spaces. The site welcomes the return of urban contributors and the rise of socioeconomic prosperity.

URBAN AMPLIFICATION

CRISIS! POTENTIAL DOWNTURN

The Armature proves itself as an economic driver as the site experiences a greater number of visitors therefore accumulating higher income. This rise in economic well-being creates a larger workforce and work areas intensitfy in density and productivity. Inhabitants maintain their locations on site and also experience a rise in population.

BOOM! ECONOMIC UPSURGE The intensity of program is lost as densities and functions saturate the site. The armature is still defined by its high level of visitor activity and new dynamics are produced as hybrids blend even further. Population density is well beyond that of SĂŁo Paulo but the area still functions smoothly due to the flexibility of program and expandability of structures.

The natural flux in local and global economy coupled with any number of socio-political frictions puts Armature Urbanism to the test as unemployment rates rise and site tourism evaporates. Small clusters of work and living spaces maintain some of their integrity but as the environment deteriorates, conditions become unstable.

REGENERATION From economic driver to residential provider, the Armature makes a shift in function and program just before an economic recession. The structure and resources built into this urban anchor allows for the restructuring of communities within the site. The depletion of site visitors and the major decline in business activity leaves residents with very little. The infrastructure and connectivity of the Armature pulls locals together and breeds new housing typologies along with small, locally supported businesses within its periphery.

Urban Inhabitant (Local Urban Producer (Worker)


HYBRID CONDITIONS TO CULTIVATE COEXISTENCE Deploy residential mixed-use structures that host different programs and promote interactivity between various site users. ELEVATED HOTEL The elevated hotel allows for circulation to weave through the site from the opposite side of Av. Dr. Gastão Vidigal. The covered plaza under the porous building creates market opportunities for tourists and locals to interact. The elevated hotel features balconies that overlook the Armature and roadway, and serves as an iconic attraction for the site, distinctly visible above the overpass.

Water Management

Electrical Bundle

Porous Pavement

Data Box Water Management

Water Management Electrical Bundle Data Box

URBAN PAVILION

“O” Court Offices

Along Av. Dr. Gastão Vidigal, collaborative working offices for the incoming USP students and entrepreneurs are instituted, along with the O-Court retail shops and pavilions. The Armature runs adjacent to the lot, supplying an increase in density. Developers invest in the vacant land and provide a public square amenity; after investing in a dense area the developers then supply the Armature with a public park for the community.

Umbrella Dates

Lina Bo Mall

Pedestrial Bike Slope Sloped Park

Social Bike Parking

Electrical Bundle Data Box Water Management


EDUCATIONAL PAVILION An educational and recreational hub for the neighbourhood’s students, ranging from primary school kids to university students. The complex, with its meandering path, encourages activity and interaction while generating a place for gathering. Different scales of interventions provide amenities for both residents on site as well as the surrounding community.

Basketball Arena

Outdoor Game Pavilion

Indoor-Outdoor Educational Pavilion

Playground

Green Lounge

Skatepark

Vines Attack

FEIRA LEOPOLDINA To retain the existing spirit of the market, the integration and renovation of existing buildings is proposed to become absorbed by the Armature. The space is envisioned as a nexus of cultural and social interaction with mixed programs including retail, leisure, restaurants, and transit services.

Bike Share

Ecological Embankment

Food Truck Paradise

Electrical Bundle Data Box Social Interaction

Water Management


WAREHOUSE GYM An existing warehouse employs the skinning strategy and is stripped down to its framework, capable of providing lighting, sound, temporary cover, and other functions. An outdoor field occupies the space, creating a public athletic complex supported by the framework’s infrastructural capacities and supplied by the Armature’s pedestrian population.

Art Wall

Climbing Wall

Warehouse Gym Bike Charging Station

Sculpture Wii Park

Electrical Bundle Data Box Water Management

RIVER CONNECTION + WATER TREATMENT Through the use of an elevated system, the Armature extends across the river and connects to a water treatment facility, encouraging community engagement throughout the dispersed platforms and pockets overlooking the river and adjacent neighbourhoods.as an iconic attraction for the site, distinctly visible above the overpass.

Lookout Pocket

Water Basins

Treatment Platform

Elevated Pathway

Sediment


Rooftop Terrace

VILA BOĂŠMIA Warehouses are converted into mixed use clusters of locally-owned shops, cafĂŠs, and eateries serving the native artist and designer community. Visitors on the Armature encounter public installations and large artworks on display dotted between galleries and exhibition halls inserted into converted structures, while interspersed plazas and performance spaces create opportunity for spontaneous bursts of activity.

Food Kiosk

Elevated Plaza Outdoor Seating

Public Performance Scenic Overlook Art Roofscape Bike Sharing

Data Box Electrical Bundle Water Management

Pocket Parks

URBAN JUNGLE Located between Armatures, this mixed-use space combines recreation and retail with mid-rise residential. Retail on the ground with services lifted encourages passage through the open public space beneath, inviting a variety of uses.

Pocket Park

Rooftop Oasis

Porous Pavement


Plug-In Frames

LIVE / WORK / COMMUNITY CLUSTER

Tactical Density

Height Utilization

The aggregation of essential services within the site intends to achieve the coordination of systems and the efficiency of new hybrid typologies. The rules and regulations visualized in an Armature Urbanism can be deployed anywhere within the site and require a high degree of cooperation between neighbors and planning agencies of SĂŁo Paulo.

Allowable Street Coverage

Required Community Structure per x Units

Required Open Slots Per x Units

Dual-functioning Infrastructure

STUDENT + SENIOR + FARM COEXISTENCE This framework appropriates Elemental Housing. A frame is constructed, and then half of the spaces are used for living, while residents configure the remaining half for other uses. Next to the hydroponic farm is a community farm that serves the residents and also functions as a gathering space.

Hydroponic Farm

Adaptable Frame

Student and Senior Housing

Bike Charging Station

Agriculture Storage Bike Sharing Service

Community Farm Spring Festival

Student Workspace Drone Port Canopy


URBAN ABSORBER Picnic Patch

The Absorber typology temporarily provides retail and parking space, offsetting the businesses that are displaced by the removal of the CEAGESP market and absorbing the functions of buildings being renovated and moved. They are designed to flexibly accommodate changes in site use and to adapt gradually to the anticipated decline of vehicles, shifting from car sheds to multifunctional public spaces.

Cast Concrete Parking

Volleyball Court

Recreation Lot Social Bike Parking Parking Deck Gallery

Commercial Infill

PARK + BIKE HUB A large bike parking structure with sloped occupiable rooftops supports the increase in bike traffic along the Armature. Connection is available to bus transit for longer distance travels.

Social Bike Parking

Umbrella Date Pavilions

Slope Roof

Bus Stop Bus STop


TACTICAL URBAN INTERVENTIONS Non-permanent human scaled interventions that are easily implementable. These elements are deployed across the armature and provide a framework for development of program, density and activity.

Badminton Playground

Food Trucks

Food Plaza

Bus Library

Pixacao Art Scape

Multimodal Stop

RV Rest Stop

Bridge Overlook

Bike Share Service

Food Truck Paradise

Bridge Catwalk

Multimodal Stop

Algae Skin Office

Ecological Playground

CEAGESP Sports

Greenhouse Conversion

Solar Energy Collector

Bike Charging Station

Silo Residence


Drone Port Canopy

Farmer’s Market

Water Purification Basin

Water Treatment Overlook

Artist Exchange

Spring Festival

Sculpture Playground

Storm Management

Silo Festival

Silo Gala

Traffic Jelly

Food Cart

Car-Share Lot

Sculpture Park

Cultural Plaza

Rice Paddy Playground

Green Roof Platform

Skinned Warehouses

Zen Exchange

Interior Courtyard


MULTIPLE STAKEHOLDERS AS ACTIVE CONTRIBUTORS WHITE COLLAR WORKER

BLUE COLLAR WORKER

The site had a strong business presence that needed to be preserved. Villa Lobos office park remained with its existing program. To enhance the commuting experience for the workers, new streets were introduced and transportation was modified to reduce traffic during rush hours.

ENTREPRENEUR

The importance of the blue collar worker cannot be underestimated; this is an essential character for the construction and development of the phases of the site, responsible for maintenance and customer service. To facilitate his daily commute and navigate easily around the site new connections to the adjacent neighbourhoods were created.

To promote economic growth the site needed to become a resource for raising entrepreneurs, that become a catalyst for São Paulo’s economy. To host these activities incubator spaces were designed as individual or collaborative spaces to launch small companies, support warehouses for prototype production, testing and marketing.

BIKE CHARGING

CULTURAL PLAZA I met my wife by one of these umbrellas.

These umbrellas are so romantic.

I finally found the station, good thing I followed the red brick road.

Never late for work with this shuttle!

Who is Lina Bo Bardi?

The Clock Tower is right there. Good thing the city kept it. What time is it?

Have to train for the

DRONE PORT CANOPY marathon next week.

This guy is kicking my butt.

BRIDGE OVERLOOKI can walk to the

favela from here, time to visit Mom.

I can run the whole red path in 45 min!

There are no more mosquitos in the water!!!

Waiting for my drone delivery, my textbook should be here any minute.

This route to school is faster!

They don’t have ice cream like this in the States. Make São Paulo great again!


CREATIVE DESIGNER

STUDENT

The site currently hosts several creative studios. This activity is enhanced by creating more spaces for design and collaboration between different disciplines. Open spaces in and out of the Armature become support for gathering and interaction.

SILO FESTIVAL

VISITOR

The proximity to the University of São Paulo ensures that students will no longer need to travel to hostels on the outskirts of the city; instead student, professor and senior housing is provided only four minutes away from the university. This ensures the safety of the students and brings life to the site.

The site aims to become an attraction for people from different locations of São Paulo. Visitors will enjoy the amenities of the site and be part of the new economy that will boost the status of Vila Leopoldina and adjacent areas, promoting new jobs and opportunities for informal pop shops and local businesses.

MULTIMODAL STOP

Excuse me Sir, do you know if this bus stops at São Paulo University?

I can’t wait for the carnival party to start.

The neighborhood has become so joyful and safe. There is going to be a samba perrformance at the end.

My daughther will be performing, I’m so excited. reg# 1792-974-3823

BADMINTON PLAYGROUND

Yes, the route has been upgraded to serve more people, also there is a shuttle service that can bring you back.

SCULPTURE PARK

Come at me bro! I know Capoeira!

Do you know what the purpose of this structure is? It’s a little strange...

Where’s the bike charging station? It’s a sculptural park, the local artists have temporary displays of their work and people attend the exhibits.


ATMOSPHERIC SKETCHES The daily life of the city’s people informs and is supported by the infrastructural, architectural, and tactile responses of an Armature Urbanism. ELEVATED HOTEL The elevated hotel allows for circulation to weave through the site from the opposite side of Av. Dr. Gastão Vidigal. The covered plaza under the porous building creates market opportunities for tourists and locals to interact. The elevated hotel features balconies that overlook the Armature and roadway, and serves as an iconic attraction for the site, distinctly visible above the overpass.

WAREHOUSE GYM An existing warehouse employs the skinning strategy and is stripped down to its framework, capable of providing lighting, sound, temporary cover, and other functions. An outdoor field occupies the space, creating a public athletic complex supported by the framework’s infrastructural capacities and supplied by the Armature’s pedestrian population.


EDUCATIONAL PAVILION An educational and recreational hub for the neighbourhood’s students, ranging from primary school kids to university students. The complex, with its meandering path, encourages activity and interaction while generating a place for gathering. Different scales of interventions provide amenities for both residents on site as well as the surrounding community.

NESTED INCUBATORS By introducing new housing, this lot is transformed from retail only to a hybrid catalyst that keeps the essence of the location. Incubator spaces for startup companies are nested in the courtyards to create different levels of workspaces that range from individual office modules to small production warehouses.


VILA BOĂŠMIA Warehouses are converted into mixed use clusters of locally-owned shops, cafĂŠs, and eateries serving the native artist and designer community. Visitors on the Armature encounter public installations and large artworks on display dotted between galleries and exhibition halls inserted into converted structures, while interspersed plazas and performance spaces create opportunity for spontaneous bursts of activity.

FEIRA LEOPOLDINA To retain the existing spirit of the market, the integration and renovation of existing buildings is proposed to become absorbed by the Armature. The space is envisioned as a nexus of cultural and social interaction with mixed programs including retail, leisure, restaurants, and transit services.


RIVER CONNECTION + WATER TREATMENT Through the use of an elevated system, the Armature extends across the river and connects to a water treatment facility, encouraging community engagement throughout the dispersed platforms and pockets overlooking the river and adjacent neighbourhoods.

URBAN PAVILION Along Av. Dr. GastĂŁo Vidigal, collaborative working offices for the incoming USP students and entrepreneurs are instituted, along with the O-Court retail shops and pavilions. The Armature runs adjacent to the lot, supplying an increase in density. Developers invest in the vacant land and provide a public square amenity; after investing in a dense area the developers then supply the Armature with a public park for the community.




Culture Agency Year 4, Fall 2016 Critic / Jesse LeCavalier Assignment 3: Organization Bias Group work of 2 | Duration: 2 weeks

In this phrase, each group takes on a bias of an agency (housing, work, culture, ecology, transportation, etc.) and develop a version for the site. In this case, our group is the culture agency. The project approriates OMA's Parc de la Villette organization strategy for the site's organization, and together with that, develop a catalog to be deployed on the site. The project takes on these strategies, with large cultural spaces, boulevard to connect larger institutional spaces, and "confetti" programs that are urban acupuncture or interventions that get deployed to facilitate events. The making of the collage also informs the vision for the site, with the intermixing of different scales, forces and layers.

Collage informs vision, strategy, and organization


Large

Temporary

Large

Permanent

Small

Culture Theme Catalog and Catalog Characteristics (from small to large, and from temporary to permanent)


Culture Agency - Site Axon


Confetti Network Diagram

Culture Agency - Exploded Axon

Culture Agency - Catalog of Deployment Elements


Culture Event - Food Festival


Culture Event - Art Festival


Crisis! Climate Change Year 4, Fall 2016 Critic / Jesse LeCavalier Assignment 4: Crisis - Multiple Agencies Group work of 5| Duration: 2 weeks

In this phrase, agencies/organizations get together and develop a scheme that addresses the priorities of all agencies, together with the premise: climate change. Taking into account issues such as food shortage, energy shortage, and new modes of working, living, and recreation in 2040, the projects propose hybrid conditions of working, living, moving, and production of food. Ecological layers are also conceived to tie the hybrid fields together.

Existing Site Conditions

Residential Towers

Office Pods

Retails and

Housing

Markets Housing Pods

Elevated Housing

Hydroponic Farms

Recreational Pavilions On The Water

Housing On the Water Utility Facilities

First Iteration of Model showing vertical farms, cultural centers, mat housing, river and river recreational facilities, worker spaces, water and utility tower, and market halls.

Water Towers


Residential Towers

Office and Retail

Utility Facilities Housing and

Housing

Office Pods

Framework

Elevated Transportation

Housing

Algae Skin Office

Electric Tram Cultural Facilities Electric Charging Station

Existing

Cultural Facilities

Train Station

Commericial Spine

Second Iterations of the model showing hybrid conditions to promote co-existence such as living, working, utilities, transportation, cultural facilities, commerical facilities, etc.



System Infrastructure Blur Year 2, Spring 2015 Critic / Marcelo Lopez-Dinardi Final Review

This project is about blurring, a response to the pervasive context of Perth Amboy from the site observation :visual noise. Process of making collages of site analysis, visions for the town and the project, drawing of unit aggregations and linear aggregations provides the starting point for architecture operations to achieve this�blur�. Strategie were employed: split levels, scattered platforms and programs, weaving paths and system of enclosure to blur: boundary, programs, path, in/out relationship and perception.


Row 1 — Site analysis

Row 2 — City vision

Row 3 — Project vision


Linear Aggregations


Operation: From unit to system to plans

Subtracting and elevating - System flexibility

Plan system


A way to conceive the "blur" - Diagrammatic axon of overlayed plans and sections

A way to conceive the "blur" - Sketch


Diagrammatic plans show multiple split levels, scattered platforms and weaving paths


Diagrammatic sections show split levels and blur enclosure


Diagram showing the flexibility of structure, as related to geometry and system application

Axon showing structural columns


Axon showing flexibility of system, as a variation to include multi-color glass for the enclosure


Part of exploded axon showing scattered platforms, programs and activities


Composite axon showing blur enclosure and activities


System Infrastructure: Material Concrete CoAD Masonry Design Competition Year 2, Spring 2015 Critic / Marcelo Lopez-Dinardi Design Team

This competition has two folds: the project and the build. The project asks to design a police station located in Perth Amboy (NJ), with the emphasis on the architectonic of masonry. The project features a connection from lower train station level to Elm street, and the systematic application of CMU on architectural elements through out the whole building. The build, however, is not conceived as a small scale representation, or a partial mockup of the project. CMU - the most common and cheap material in construction, was used as a starting point for architecture investigation into the construction of material, spatial perception, and the complexity and reality of things.


Plans of police station project

Diagram shows how system is applied throughout the building




System manifested in space and volume

System Overlaying on Section

System Overlaying on Site

Site

System Operation Diagram

Path for quick passage

Extracting and cutting part of the system to create slope

System Overlaying on Site

Site

System Operation Diagram

Diagrams show system application on geometry and architecture operations


Wall 5/5 Most Complexity

Wall 4/5 Intermediate Complexity Wall 3/5 Least Complexity Wall 2/5 Intermediate Complexity

Build diagram - wall complexity

Wall 1/5 Most Complexity

Build diagram - perception and visibility

Diagrams of the build - show the complexity and spatial perception the CMU walls


Diagram — CMU Cuts Matrix


Physical Model — Plexi Glass


The build - full scale (6'x8'x8') at NJIT-CoAD


Close up photos of the build




Undisciplined CMU NJIT CoAD Book Summer 2015 Editors: Marcelo Lopez-Dinardi, Pier Paolo Pala, Chau Tran, Yuliya Veligurskaya Task: Book layout

This book documents the efforts and outcome of the Brick build competition of the Spring 2015 studio. Shifting from the expected representation of the whole building, the focus was given to the exploration of the material parameters and cultural dimension of the project on the given site of a 6’ x 8’ x 8’ volume. The basic CMU was chosen due to its commonplace status in the construction industry stimulating unexpected readings including its cultural implications. The design process was not linear and it required simultaneous exploration and production through digital, physical, and analog methods. Primarily this publication documents the build or mock-up, however, it showcases the individual work of a group of students including the final selection from which this project was based. While the built project is meant to last a year, this book is a long-lasting record of the process that produced it and the varied realities that were provoked through it.

More at: https://issuu.com/marcelolopez-dinardi/docs/un-disciplined_cmuweb/1



Social Activator Homogeneous Dwelling Year 3, Fall 2015 Critic / Anthony Schuman Assignment 2 (Group of two): Horizontal Aggregation of 100 Micro-Units on an Acre

This project takes each unit and elaborate on the potential of each, by making one a housing unit, and another public program unit. The housing units are about compact living, and are arranged in a horizontal manner. The public program units are plugged in between to activate the spaces in between, to accommodate for different social needs and life style needs. By these different activities/ programs that bring people outside and create an interacting community, the larger ambition is to transform how people live together and with each other.

Physical Model—without Pavilions


Physical Model—with Pavilions

Physical Model—Pavilions




Dwelling Unit

Sectional Perspective—Interactions and Activities

Dwelling Unit—Rolling Door Mechanism


Bathing Area Cooking Area

Eating Area Socializing Area

Painting Area

Sleep

Public Program Unit

Storage

Public Program Unit—Spatial Transformation


Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan—Circulation


Cross Section

Second Floor Plan

Second Floor Plan—Circulation

Longitudinal Section



Sketches—Pavilion Programs




Temporary City Nomadic Dwelling Year 3, Fall 2015 Critic / Anthony Schuman Assignment 4: Hybrid - FAR 20 - Micro Units Duration: 5 weeks

This project explores the temporary nature of live, work, and play, and how to accommodates for multiple interpretations of these functions. Micro-unit provides a starting point for high density living (FAR20) in 2040, and allows for flexibility and adaptability of uses, in which residents can inhabit, adapt and move on as they wish. Maker spaces are provided to accommodate for the shifting nature of work—gig economy, and recreational spaces are provided to create social groupings, or multilevel associations within high density living. Specifically, the project ponders on these questions: How long do people like to live in micro-units? Will people work from home more in the future? Do they keep moving around depends on work conditions and commissions? How do we accommodate for interactions and create social groupings within high density living? How dense is too dense?

Site Analysis Collage Journal Square—History and Development

Site Analysis Collage Journal Square—Revival of Art and Culture

Site Analysis Collage Journal Square—Positive Changes


Diagram of Micro Unit—Rotated Walls and Enclosure


Micro Unit Plan

Micro Unit Section


Ground Floor Plan


Unit Complex Floor Plan


0' 10' 25'

45'

Section AA



Section AA—Detail


0'

10'

25'

45'

Section BB


Section BB—Detail



Section BB—Detail



Section BB—Detail



Axon Drawing of Top Floors


Ambiguity Undefined Year 3, Spring 2016 Critic / Maria Hurtado de Mendoza—Andrew Varela Assignment 2 (Group of two): Clinic on an urban site (Newark-Crittenden Street) Duration: 2 weeks

This project explores the idea of ambiguity by the exploration of a module, and the different spatial qualities are carried through different module aggregations. The modules inform strategies in plan and section, as well as spatial and dimensional specificities. As a result, multiple configurations are manifested in form, space, and facade.

Module

Spatial Conditions from Module Aggregation

Transparent Glass

Translucent Glass

Opage Glass

Module Materials

One Section of Module Aggregation


Structure Frame of all Sections


Ground Floor Plan


Second Floor Plan

First Floor Plan

0'

10'

25'

45'


Section 4

Section 8

Section 3

Section 7

Section 2

Section 6

Section 1

Section 5


Section 12

Section 16

Section 11

Section 15

Section 10

Section 14

Section 9

Section 13



Exploded Axon of Sections 9,10,11,12




Research // Works




Self-Sufficiency MIP 652 - GIS

Year 3, Fall 2015 Professor / Megan Marini Group work of two

Currently, Newark only has 11 farms, which can feed 0.074% of Newark food demand. This research projects asks questions about selfsufficiency in urban farming in Newark: what happen if we turn 50% or 100% of all vacant lots in Newark into farms, what are the economic yields and capacity of these farms, and what are the social dimensions they facilitate. By this exploration the project aims to understand about resiliency of urban farming, the network of farms and facilities that support it, the interrelated transportation network, potential human resources and economic values yield when implementing this model.

Newark Food Demand

Covege of Existing Farms


Vacant Lots


Vacant Lot

Vacant lot total area study-Yield-Food demand coverage


Economic Yield if all the vacant lots turns into... Melon

Squash

Tomato

Cabbage

Leek

Onion

Transportation: proximity to public transportation for easy access to and from farms for workers, consumers, etc.


Poverty Level Estimate Vacant Lot

Value 5,428 - 7,874

Newark_Wards_CLip Field

0 0 - 2556 2556 - 3569 3569 - 4381 4381 - 5369 5369 - 7700

Human Resources: Most Potential Job Creation Zones

0.4250 0.85

1.7

2.55

Miles 3.4


Transportation: proximity to public transportation for easy access to and from farms for workers, consumers, etc.


0.5 Mile Ra

Miles 0 0.5 Facilites: Neighborhood services and recreation centers in Newark - Buffer radius of 0.5 mile

1

2

3

4


Research-Pill Logistics Arch 534 - History of Architecture Technology Year 3, Spring 2016 Professor / Jesse LeCavalier Group work of two: Graphic Layout, Writing

This paper looks at pills as concentrated pieces of technology. The understanding of their physical attributes, designs, packaging and logistics of production and distribution, policy and procedures, as well as their illegal economic strata help us understand how pharmaceutical contents are designed, manipulated, and packaged to become familiar, standardized and attested objects that assimilate into our daily lives. The range of exploration includes, but is not limited to: pharmaceutical marketing, advertisement, color theory, tablet design, and consumption. With these findings, we aim to understand how its consumption affects our interactions and perceptions of our environment...

Full Article http://issuu.com/chautran6/docs/01_tran_veligurskaya_final_ paper_ pi/1


Matrix| lCapsules Capsulesand andTablets Tablets as as aa Logistical Logistical Pharmaceutical Matrix PharmacueticalMicrotechnology: Microtechnology:

Oval

Diamond

5,6 & 8 side

Rectangle

Round

Square

Triangle


52 James Street Year 2, Spring 2015 Critic / Marcelo Lopez-Dinardi Two student group project

This project asks to design a front and back faรงade for 52 James Street. Taken from the context of surrounding row houses, defamiliarization was employed as a strategy to reconfigure and recombine familiar elements such as color patterns, textures, opening capacities and bay windows. Surrounding facades were drawn, and then overlapped, to provide the defamliarized openings for the studied faรงades. Color and texture were also taken into consideration, to provide the faรงade with both smooth and rough surfaces. These elements, when combined, serve as a collage which is both familiar and unfamiliar.

Front facade

Defamiliarizing row house context - by laying surrounding facades, and gradually lowering image quality to study familiar colors and textures

Back facade


Facades of surrounding row houses

Study of opening capacities of surrounding row houses, and defamiliarizing by overlaying them in different positions

Picking front and back facades based on 40% - 60% rule asked by the assignment, 40% opening for the front facade, and 60% opening for the back facade


Elements At the Met Summer Work at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Summer 2016 Research Project Assisting the Architecture Curator — Department of Modern and Contemporary Art

This research follows an initiative by Beatrice Galilee - the architecture curator at the Met. The project appropriates The 14th International Architecture Exhibition directed by Rem Koolhaas with the chosen theme Fundamentals, which dedicated to the celebration of the contemporary, and looks at histories and tries to reconstruct how architecture finds itself in its current situation, and speculates on its future. The research provides an introspection into the Met's collection with the elements' various time frames, scales, materials, and cultural meanings, and aims to showcase the Met in its plethora of architecture collections.

ca. 2630–2611 B.C

ca. 1417–1379 B.C

ca. 560–75

650–750

A.H. 755/A.D. 1354–55

ca. 1319

1581

16th century

ca. 1600

ca. 1711–56

ca. 2150–2010 B.C.

5th–6th century

second half 17th century

18th century

ca. 1780

19th century

probably 19th century

19th century

19th–20th century

19th–20th century

ca. 1184–1153 B.C.

ca. 6th–7th century A.D.

15th century style

second half 16th century

last quarter of 16th century

ca. 1675

1600–1700

18th century

18th or 19th century

ca. 1800

ca. 2458–2446 B.C.

ca. 2446–2389 B.C.

ca. 2353–2323 B.C.

ca. 2289–2255 B.C.

ca. 1981–1550 B.C.

ca. 5th century B.C.

380–362 B.C.

380–343 B.C.

332–30 B.C.

ca. 300 B.C.

ca. 2381–2323 B.C.

completed by 10 B.C.

dated A.H. 1119/A.D. 1707

ca. 1478–82

1506–15

ca. 1547–48

1680

ca. 1682–84

1695–1700

ca. 1720 or later

Timeline of the Elements — Walls, Doors, Windows, Columns, Period Rooms


1801

1804

ca. 1810–18

19th century

19th century

19th century

ca. 1905–15

1931

1933

1991

late 19th century

late 19th–early 20th century

1910

1915

1915

ca. 1923

1935–43

1933

1969–71

1989, printed 1991

1882–84

second half 19th century

19th–20th century

late 19th–early 20th century

1900

ca. 1905

1908–9

1915

1930–31

1931

dated 533–43

ca. 6th century

late 10th century

1350–1400

early 15th or 19th century

Qianlong period (1736–95)

1765–67

1879–82

1905

2013

1748

ca. 1768–72, with later additions

1765–66, remodeled 1769–71

1763–71

1766–69

ca. 1774, with later additions

ca. 1785, with later additions

ca. 1810

1912–15

1989


Interest // Fine Arts



1

2


3

4

5

1. Still Life (pencil) 2. Still Life 2 (charcoal) 3. Still Life 3 (pencil) 4. Sleepy (pencil) 5. Art Class (pencil)


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